1\n 1JeoI ~ O 1tnwnii. THE VOlCE OF HAWAII------__;_--

VOL. VI. UNIVERSITY OF HAWAII, HONOLULU, HAWAII, OCT. 13, 1927

I DEBATERS TO One-A~tPiaysTo HAWAII LOSES Oahu Blues-Varsity PROFIT-SPLIT ARRIVE HERE Be Gtven .Tomght ALUMNI GAME; . . G N S d VOJEDDOWN NEXT MONDAy At Pansh House SCORE IS 3 TO 2 \ . arne e~t atur ay BY STUDENTS • A)I u. of_H. ,Students I I . \ Wtll Open Season Oregon Team to Make and Friends Are Deans Put Up Hard A. S. U. H. Meeti,ng 1 World Tour; Meets Invited Fight Against On Saturday, October 22, t he lid. really ·will look like in action . 'rhe .of the Senior League foot ball season backfield, composed of "Rusty" Holt, Acts on Proposed Hawaii First The University of Hawaii Dramatic Rivals wm fly off wl:th a roar, for on t his date Blll Blaisdell, 'IRed" McQueen, Willie Changes --- Club will present three one a-ct plays the University of 'Ha.waii Deans m eet Whitt ! ~, " Chicken" Auld, and "Mule". the new but already fam,ous Oahu Herbe1i, h as brawn and brains wit h STAY TWO WEEKS; ~~~~~h~a~;s: ~~~:~ at the cent ral LINE HOLDS WELL Blues. Coach Otto Klu.m promises to plenty of reseTve stren gth. If the CRAWFORD TALKS The first play w111 be "The Man have something up his sleeve for this Blues can stop the plunging of Mac­ on t he Kerb," coached by Juanita contest, and wit h t h e squad percolat­ Farlan e', the speed of Holt, and the Second De~ate Here Lemmon, with Joe Swezey and Moku Game Attracts. Many ing In fine shape, it appears that the z;nnashes of Blaisdell, t hey deserve t o Reasons For Locker Planned By Glttel in the cast. "Finders Keepers" Spectators At BJ,.ues are in for some battle. win and t he Manoaltes will have no Fees Told By follows, starring Phil Peck, Rosalie alibis .' However, lm;Ucat lons are that DL~ring t he past week, Klum h as t J::Us t rio will pull off some neat gains. Union Young, and Dot Anderson. Alia Nee­ Maui Fair been trying t o take much of the President The Blues are not without t heir ly Is coaching t his play. "Matlnata" greeness off the husky Dean m achine. brings up the rear. It is being coach- fine points, and the Fernandez Victory went to the Alumni by. t he It se~s t h at t he Alumni ga:me <;lid The first A. S. U. H. meeting of the The University of Oregon debating; ed by Regina Christofferson · and brot h eTs, Willie Wise, Pwnp Searle, narrow margin of one point last Sat­ year w~ called to order at 1 o'clock 1 much to give t h e squad a r.eal back­ Bill Jones are some of the bright and team composed of Benoit McCroskey, boasts of such actors as Herman urday In t he annual Varsity-Alumni bone, but t he players could still u se Friday afternoon, by Percy Lydgate, shin in g lights. The line, with Trau t , Avery w. Thomson, and w. E. Hemp-· Johnson, Percy Lydgate, and Beatrice. clash which took place on Maul, The more of the old fighting spirit . president of the A. S. U. H, stead, w111 arrive in Honolulu Monday Newport. final score was 3-2, and the ganie Th01mps010, · "Snookie" Mell, Collins, President David L. Crawford gave 1 The whole team shows power and morning, October 17, and wlll debate : A, new feature Is to b~ Introduced, was just as tight as the score indi- Dan Ainoa, and ot hers equally famo-us a short talk, explaining certain fees versatility on paper and in practice will u n doubtedly make up a ~orm­ th€ Univer8ity of Hawa11 team on into Dramatic night this t ime In the cates. • and charges made by the university october 21. at the Mission Memodal; form of a new orthophonic victrola Probably the most gratifying high­ and it remaJ.ns t o be seen what it lda ble forwaJi'd wall. for swimming lockers. Hall on the questio~. "Resolved, that' loaned through the kindness of the· light of the game from the Universit y NO MINUTES RF;AD foreign nations immediately a11andoh . Bergstron Company. This w111 standpoint, was the stubborn re s i s ~ On'e Hundred Hens Opening the business meeting, extraterritorial privileges In China." · furnish music between the plays. t ance shown by the Varsity when PEPRALLYIS President Lydgate said, in part as fol­ The team wm be i:net at the wharf. Members of the faculty, students backed up against their own goal. On lows: "Since there are no minutes by representatives 'of the Hawall and outside friends of the University this particular occassion, in t he second Are Stolen From to be read, we will ,go on with other Union, . which is undertaking the are urged to be present. There will quarter, the Alumni team h ad ad­ PLANNED FOR business. On May 20, 1927 a special management of • the coming debate.' be no admission fee and the curtain vanced the ball to the Deans four U. H. Poultry Farm meeting of the A. S. U. H. was he~d, From the wharf the visitors wm be; will rise promptly at 8 o'clock. yards and had four downs in which and certain business transacted. Since taken to the Pan-Pacific· Institute '' to put it over. But the fighting Dean BLUES GAPilE there was no quo1·um the actions or spirit could not be denied, and. for The ·pe aceful and quiet rutmospl1ere that meeting were not final, but rest­ where they wlll be entertained until' at the poultvy department was their departure for the Orient on; four· fruitless downs, Pump Searle ed on the endorsement or rejection greatly disturbed Iast -li'hursclo,y ni;;ht of this meeting. They are in the October 31. ' New Rooting and his backs crashed the very mid­ Students U ~ ged To dle of the line. They gain­ when one hundred hens disappeared form of resolutions recommended by A program fof the entertainment · ed, yes, but such a few feet that on mysteriously. It Is ' believed by the Turn Out For (Continued on Page 4) of the debaters has been prepared by ;. Section For the fourth down Eddie Hock men at t he farm t h at the hen s were iAlex::~onder Hume Ford. They will be, unhesitatingly awarded the hall to stolen by some highly organized body. "Jamboree" invitPd to visit the campus, and to( the Varsity. ~'3 none of the hens could be located .---, attend a banquet given by tne Ha- University "Y" 1 in town so far, and t h e robbery Friday n~ght , a week from tomor­ University · FIRST QUARTER EXCITING wall Union on October 22. Through ~ seemed to have been so well prepared row, the A. S. U. H. r.illles the 1 Ofl the help of Mrs. Edmonson, an; The first quarter was replete with beforeh and that no trace wh atsoever front lanai of Hawaii Han for a Secretary .Brings alumnus of the University of Oregon, · Will the students of the University thrills. Eddie Fernandez with severa l could be discovered. Beaides t he Jamboree in preparation for the first the Otegonians in Hawaii will prob- be willing to back up the team by brllllant run-backs of punts, shown ­ hens stolen were most ly pullets fr= "Big Game•: of the sensun,-the Oahu Fine Reputation ably entertaJn the visitors. moving over to the mauka side of the for the Alumni, while Rusty Holt fea­ tp.e best experiment pens. · Blues Contest. ' tured the Varsity 'attack. The wind Inasmuch as their visit w111 cover; stadium? This is what Coach Otto Although the school maintains one P ercy Lydgate will preside, and he In the person of Lowell Mell the favored the Deans during this quar­ 1 a period of two weeks, the Oregonians, Klum and others are wondering this night watchman at present, he is very promises an evening of festivities. University "Y" has a very promising ter and Holt, managed to average have asked for another debate in : week following announcement that inefficient ; he h.as no clock, which is which shoUld begin at 6 :45 and last and competent successor tor Dwight about ·60 yards to the punt. By into: According. to Shunzo Sak'.l- i special seating arrangements wm be. the first requisite of a night watch­ at least an hour. Ruth as its full-time secretary. Al­ log frequentJ.¥, the Manoaltes took makl, who communicated with thC' ! provided on the northern side of the man, no stations to go about, and Chicken Inn, o'r •lately, "Hale though he has not obtained com­ bUI'\0!'1'1' men in RUo. the idea Is noL ) field advantage of the circumstances and, Aloha," will put on one of its in­ plete ri

that because of lack of good roads .Profit Split Voted Extension Classes Ely,. Ford, Lee people may starve in one district Rainbow Warriors Pomona To Start while inhabitants 1n another district, Down By Students perhaps only fifty miles away, may Are Well Attended An Inner College Address Chinese have plenty to spare. He further said WILUAM JCA,EO (Continued from page 1) that the educated people in . China The team ,has for its captaln this a committee of the whole. The sec­ Great interest is manifested in the A nP-iv plan has been worked out Student Meeting abhor manual labor, and he declared season a man who is, both a leader retary '~ill 1·ead the proposition re­ extension courses which met for the at Po.mona College for the deyelop­ this to be one of the greatest misfor- a;nd a player of the first rank. "Son- garding certain amendments to the first time last week. The accounting. ment of honor cour<>es, designed to "Students in China bring both good tunes of China. ny" Kaeo started his football career constitution." classes are especially popular, judg- stllnulate inteliectuaJ attainment. and evil to China" declared Dr. John at M'Cltinley in 1922 where he was lng by the enrollment. · The · new plan purposes the establlsh­ CELEBRATE "DOUBLE TEN" h th All Star team Miss Eva Young, secretary of the A. Ely, professor of civil engineering, The Alliance meeting was a cele- c osen on e . t i A. S. U. H., then read that portion of The enrollment . in the various ment of an "Inner College," which in speaking at a Chinese Student The follOIWing y,ear as cap a n he bration affair commemorating tbe six- led hi t t i t rsch~'astic cham the minutes of the May 20th meeting courses up to Monday, Oct. 10 is as' it is hoped wil~ event~ally ' constitute Alliance meeting held last Saturday · s ea;rn o n e v '• - that pertained to certain amendments follows: r • the larger percentage of the students teenth anniversary of "Double Ten." 'pionshlp completely upsetting the evening at the Nuuanu "Y" audi- Prof. s . c. Lee gave a brief survey of to the A. s. u. H. Constitution re­ 46-El~entary Accounting enrolled. E2mphasis is to be placed torium. "They have brought about critic's pre-season dope. th:e situation leading to the over- 'H i f th very few on th garding athietic awards and the re­ 29~Advanced Accounting on student initiative and the develop- enormous changes and improvements e s one o e • e throw of the Manchurian monarchy · ad 1 'thr y v it naming of articles.. - Wb.en she had 10- Business Law Jrient of .clear thinking me~ and wo- in society." Professor Ely continued. squ w 1o are ee ear ars Y and the important events of the out- tt A f t • ff nse gua.td finished reading, Mr. Lydgate asked 7-Lern:·il special application and examination only. speak: ' . Mr. Ly'&gate replied · in , the for centuries. To'urists are not al- in addition to the existing regula- ; 1 tions.' 1 amrmative. Mr. Sakamaki asked Mr. lowed to take pi-ct~res while the Jews Lydgate to point .out the specific act ar~ thus itt worship as they believe. . 2. .That special and individual at- ' Scliool Record Is of the A. S. U . H. which .prohi-bited that it is .a sign, of ridicule and re- t,!lntion be given to the students of Ask about .our. . partial · .any non-member to speak at a meet­ sent it. Anyone'• who persists in:' the ''collegiU1m" in the effort to make Index To Success· ing. Mr. Lydgate said that the Ex­ photographing them; ' if . seen by the,· it possible for them to relate them- payment plan of home . ecutive Committee had ruled in this Jews, is likely to be stoned. 'i selves more directly, and with en- (Continued From Page 3.) matter. Mr. Sakamaki questioned this INTERESTING SIGHTS thusiasm, to an intellectual program; the preva1Ung . Alffier.tcan ,contE~mpt owning. statement. The sacred places, such as the in the hope that, as a group, they of high scholarship in the conditions RIGHT TO SPEAK DENIED Church of the Holy Sepulchre in will :find enough in common to de-; of our national development which _Mr. ·Sakamaki then asked Mr. Lyd­ Jerusalem and the Church which is velop a.n esprit de corps sumcient placed a premium upon willingness to gate whetp..~r he coul~ . speak by built over the Manger i~ Bethlehem, 'j to withstand the crowd psychology· take a chance and minimized the are very interesting. The Church of of the larger and ·mqrt:: heterogeneous proxy; that is, whether he ·could speak 1 reward's of patient thorough training, in the name of an A. S. U. H. mem­ the Holy ~epulchre and the Cl:mt·cbtfl studept group. , He concludes: Realty Associates, .. ~ttd. ber. Mr. Lydgate asked him to name built over the Manger are each di .3. That courses be conducted so' "If a student belongs to the high- . • J· his proxy, which Mr. Sakamaki did. ed Into three parts and far as possible on the semester basis, est 'tenth of his class, in general to Telephone 2333 ., And proceeding on the assumption the Roman CathoUcs, the with1 the emphasis of the course on ' the · group marked excellent, his that he had now won the right to. Christians and the Greek ca a m.'l.jor problem with which the de- ' chances of achieving a career in life 223 S. l(:Uig St...... ·, speak, Mr. Sakamaki again requested The differE;nt sects are very jealous tailed work should be integrated. distinguished by the approval of his the president to hav~ 'the entire· min­ each other and frequent This probl'e)m should involve the !n fellow men are 40 · times as great as ti'tes of May 20 meeting read. Arthur and bloodshed have caused dividual initiative of the student, they· are, on the average, if he be·­ Wl!iston then interrupted Mr. Saka­ ·inedan guards to be placed guided by conference with the longs to .the lower nine-tenths· and maki, and charged' that ,the · ~non- · prevent fights and quarrels oetw·een!l teacher. further, 'the probab111ties of his 'name, member was taking :·too,, much tim~. them. The beauty of the churches has 4. That where exa:minations and beiing found in lists .:J,I.ke "Who!.s and shouldn't be allowed to speak." hH·n marred b~ modern bright and other written assignments become Who" will be fifty t:i!mes 'as great. The president . also seemed unfavor­ gaudy decorations. Jerusalem is necessary they should avoid as far as "Is there another test in a young -able to having Mr. Sakamaki speak, rounded by a great wall, and possible the kind of question which man's life that affords as certain a Metropolitan ;Meat Market ·so the l~tter : took .his seat.. . entered through several great calls for mere enumeration of facts· prophecy of his future as hls four Mr. Lydgate then ·presen.ted a peti7 The beautiful Mosque of omar and the simple use of memory, and years' college record?" tion·, s1gned by a· number of A. S. U. built on the site of Solomon's temj stress rather the process of thinking. Buy H. members and received by the Ex:- · ple on the Rock of Morah and as the 5. That the exajminations at the 1 '~•...,•-•~•~•-.•H•-•~•~•-.•H•-•~•~•.. •~•~•_.•...,•H•~•~••• · 'xecutive 1.Committee on October 3, 19~7. Mohammedans do not believe in stat ~ . end of the senior year s:twuld be Clean and Wholesome Food This , petition pr9pqsed a constitu­ ues and • images; the inner- walls are· comprehensive, designed to gauge Buy or Rent a Typewriter to do i . tional amendment wh'ich would give decorated with Arabesque patterns! the value of the entire four years ·your school work with, at' ~ the ,'the editors of student publications an colored in mosaics. i work. FACTORY REBUILT equal share in the profits of ,the pub­ IN SWITZERLAND UNDERWOOD & )tcations, together with the business . . Miss Cadwell toured Belgium anc1, 1 NEW WORDS ADDED .manage1·s, while the A. S. U. · H. got Holland, then she went up the Rhine Twelve words .in "alternative spell­ REMINGTONS METRO~OLITAN •25 % of the profits. from Cologne to Biebrich, to Frank­ ing" have · been enterecl in diction­ Sold on Monthly R~ntal Plan. . l . . . ' '.l• ", ' PETITION DISCUSSED fort and then to Switzer!and where ~ aries of the English language after New Standard Keyboard Portable Grocery .and · Fruits and . . Although it was not yet ten days she remained for six weeks. Although·: 20 years of effort. Typewriters, All Makes after the petition had· been announc­ Miss Cadwell did not climb the peaksr ~ Tlie words accorded dictionary ·Delicatessen Vegetables _,ed, Mr. Lydgate called for discussion Mount Blanc, the Jungfrau and the;' recognition are tho, altho, thru, thru­ H·ONOLULU 'on the matter. Joe Gerdes and Percy Matterhorn, she had the pleasur.e of' out, thoro, thorofare, thoroly, pro­ Smith spoke against the petition, de­ riding up part of the way on the': gram, cataJog, decalog, ped(l.gog, and TYPEWRITER CO. (THE MOST SANITARY AND M~DERN MARKET IN THE CITY) clariP,!?j that the edit9rs did. not work cogwheel ~allw~ys. prolog. PHONE 5575 for Demonstl'atlon 'eno.ugli' to deserve aii.y compensation, other· than.- the soholastic ·credits for •••••••••••••••••••••••• journaJisnn, and the "honor" of their positions. With all thy getting- --- · ------~------.------,---- "MOTION" VOTED UPON . GET ',- While no motion had been put, Mr. . . I t' Lydgate asked for an affirmative vote ' f .to the "mqtiori that this proposed amendent be rejected." The so-call­ INSURANCE! ed "motion" as stated by the chair was voted upon and declared passed. Mr. Lydgate then declared the Slogan Gok. ! 'test meeting turned into "pep practice." I He called on Allen Moore to lead the students in some university yells, after which the meeting broke up. Alexander & -~ Baldwin, Ltd:. 119 Merchant St. Phone 4901 FROSH TO H~ VE DUES . The freshmen held a short business •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• How About Two FREE ~ TICKETS· meeting in Gartley Hall, last Friday, at 1 :00. The only business was the matter of class dues. After a. long and urgent appeal from the treasurer, To ·sat.urday's Ga~e? Kenneth AUlt, it was decided to have a fee of fifty cents a semester for dues. THE EARTH IS ROUND \ (In English 130 class) Gang--- Dean Andrews: How do we know that the earth is round? Margaret Wong: That's what they What are we going to Jdo to teach us in school. The Bank of·Bishop & Co. Dean Andrews: How do we kno~ that the earth isn't flat? King and Bishop Sts. Honolulu, T. H. the Oahu Blues? Han4 your R. Sakimoto: Because no one has fallen off the earth. t I I I I I I I I I I I I I t t t t t t t t I t I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I t I I t I I t I I suggestion in at the A. S.· Mrs. Halpern: I ha.ve t\. splendid magazine article here on the Ntcara.­ . gua.n situation. U. H. oflice be lore noon, ·, Dr. Bachman: That's fine. Please give the class the main points of the The First National Bank article. Honolulu October ·21st. Mrs. H.: Why, I haven't read it yeti . ~JUDGES ARE-

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